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Getting to the Truth: the Unreliable Narrator

TheOtherTypist (250x250)A narrator’s job is to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth. Except when it isn’t.

I recently had a run-in with an unreliable narrator, a character who—either on purpose or unintentionally—leads you down the wrong path.

The narrator appeared in The Other Typist by Suzanne Rindell. I thought I’d gotten the story figured out and then—bam—everything flip-flopped and nothing was as it seemed. My first reaction was: what? truly? My second was an urge to reread the book to see if clues were implanted within, to discover if I could have figured it out earlier.

And The Other Typist isn’t unique. Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl has garnered hype thanks to its unreliable narrator. And so did Atonement by Ian McEwan. And the movie Shutter Island.

Sometimes the deception comes about because the narrator is outright lying. Sometimes the narrator is mentally ill and is deluded about the truth him- or herself. Sometimes the narrator is simply bragging or exaggerating or being a clown, sprinkling white lies alongside snippets of truth.

Sometimes the reader knows from the beginning the narrator is being deceitful. Sometimes they suspect it along the way. And sometimes—as in my case, with The Other Typist—the reader has no clue until the very end.

But why lead the reader astray?

To create tension. To offer a challenge. To surprise—and what a surprise it is to realize everything you’ve believed has been wrong.

(P.S. Another great example of an unreliable narrator is in We Were Liars by E. Lockhart.)

What books have you read in which the narrator has tricked you?

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About the Author

Posted by Galadriel

Hi, I’m Galadriel: blogger, author, reader and resident of a quaint small town in the breathtaking West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.

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Bookstore Bliss

Chapters2 (250x250)Oh man, I’m in Chapters. The high ceiling, the grind of Starbucks coffee beans, the clog of the popular parking lot outside. And best of all: books. Row upon row of books. Entertainment and information and hope and inspiration captured within thousands—millions?—of pages, spines ready to be carefully cracked.

But why the excitement? Because of the novelty.

My town’s entire shopping district (read: one street with a couple of tiny offshoots) could fit several times into the mall I’m in now. It has a tiny fraction of the stores. It doesn’t have a gleaming bookstore.

It took me 3 ½ hours to drive here, the closest Chapters to home. It doesn’t happen very often.

Now comes the tricky/fun part: selecting. Even though I have a pile of unread books at home. Even though I could order online from Chapters or visit my library when my reading choices (if ever) run low.

I’m here. The books are at my fingertips. There’s so much. Flesh, meet paper. Paper, meet flesh.

Let’s shop.

Tell me about your bookstore bliss

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About the Author

Posted by Galadriel

Hi, I’m Galadriel: blogger, author, reader and resident of a quaint small town in the breathtaking West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.

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How to Write, à la James Bond

James BondTo celebrate the fact an unpublished James Bond story is about to come to life, let’s dive into a few writing tips from Bond creator Ian Fleming.

In a 1963 essay, Fleming offered the following:

  • You must know thrilling things before you can write about them. The stories you hear from friends or read in the paper can be built by imagination and research into incidents that will ring true in fiction.
  • Write in drab, anonymous surroundings; your lack of friends and distractions will create a vacuum that should force you into a writing mood.
  • Keep to a strict routine. Ian wrote from about 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and then did another hour’s work between 6 and 7 p.m.
  • Never correct anything and never go back to what you have written, except to the foot of the last page to see where you have gotten to. Don’t even pause to choose the right word or to verify spelling or a fact; all this can be done when your book is finished.

And why, according to Ian, should we pursue a writerly life?

Writing makes you more alive to your surroundings and, since the main ingredient of living, though you might not think so to look at most human beings, is to be alive, this is quite a worthwhile by-product of writing.

What are some of your habits?

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About the Author

Posted by Galadriel

Hi, I’m Galadriel: blogger, author, reader and resident of a quaint small town in the breathtaking West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. You can also find me on Twitter and Facebook.